国产视频

Podcast

Working While Black

Fixing racist workplace cultures could add billions to the U.S. economy

The Civil Rights movement opened up new work opportunities for Black workers. But, decades later, African-Americans work disproportionately in low-wage jobs and are over-represented in the jobs at highest risk of vanishing because of workplace automation.

White workers, meanwhile, are 50 percent more likely to hold 鈥渇uture proof鈥 jobs. These are the kind of jobs that build often on education in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math. And for those Black workers who do find a path to 鈥渇uture proof鈥 jobs in health care or tech, the reward often includes a hostile work environment. And that鈥檚 bad news for every American. One study found that eliminating racial inequality could boost the U.S. economy by as much as $2.3 trillion a year. What are we waiting for?

The podcast is a partnership of 国产视频 and Slate, and sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Subscribe to get all the new episodes on , , , or wherever you get your podcasts

Guests

  • , tech worker, author of two books, and essayist who has written 鈥淲hat It鈥檚 Like to be a聽Black man in Tech鈥 and other pieces for the Harvard Business Review.
  • Nahsis Davis, a nurse and union member in Chicago.
  • , author of Flatlining: Race, Work and Healthcare in the New Economy, and professor of sociology at Washington University in St. Louis.

Resources

  • , LeRon Barton, Harvard Business Review, 2021
  • Adia Harvey Wingfield.
  • , Adia Harvey Wingfield.
  • , PolicyLink, USC Dornsife, burning glass, National Fund for Workforce Solutions
  • Holzer, 2021
  • – Chandra Childers, IWPR, 2019
Working While Black